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Wu wei

Wu wei (simplified Chinese: 无为; traditional Chinese: 無為; pinyin: wúwéi) is an ancient Chinese concept literally meaning "inexertion", "inaction", or "effortless action".[a][1][2] Wu wei emerged in the Spring and Autumn period. With early literary examples, as an idea, in the Classic of Poetry,[3] it becomes an important concept in the Confucian Analects,[4] Chinese statecraft,[5] and Daoism. It was most commonly used to refer to an ideal form of government,[6] including the behavior of the emperor, describing a state of personal harmony, free-flowing spontaneity and laissez-faire. It generally denotes a state of spirit or state of mind, and in Confucianism, accords with conventional morality.

Wu wei
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese無為
Simplified Chinese无为
Vietnamese name
Vietnamesevô vi
Korean name
Hangul무위
Hanja無爲
Transcriptions
Revised Romanizationmuwi
Japanese name
Kanji無為
Hiraganaむい
Transcriptions
Revised Hepburnmui

Sinologist Jean François Billeter describes wu-wei as a "state of perfect knowledge of the reality of the situation, perfect efficaciousness and the realization of a perfect economy of energy", which Edward Slingerland qualifies in practice as a "set of ('transformed') dispositions (including physical bearing)... conforming with the normative order".[7]

Wu Wei is the main principle of Dao philosophy, which speaks of the importance of achieving the Dao or the Natural Way in all actions and development of things. Without forcing or rushing against the natural order of things to avoid false development and mistakes. The philosophy of Dao, 'Dao Jia' and the religion of Dao, 'Dao Jiao' are two different things. For example, in the philosophy of Dao, 'Dao Jia' there is no mysticism and belief in ghosts and evil spirits.

The founder of Dao philosophy, Lao Zi, successfully founded his philosophical school with the manuscript 'Dao De Jing', 'Treatise on Morals'. In addition, to achieve the state of Dao, the followers were required to perform certain physical exercises. Later, during the Warring States era, professional warriors used Wu Wei as the primary guide for their training and fighting methods and created Wu Wei Martial Arts. At that harsh time, among the best ancient martial arts schools, the Wu Wei school had an undeniable reputation. The core fighting skill of Wu Wei Martial Arts is the skill of the rolling power, 'Hun Yuan Gong'. According to ancient tradition, the name of that combat system was most often known as Wuweimen, 'Gates to Wu Wei'.

Early definitions edit

As quoted by the sinologist Herrlee Creel, the early scholarship of Feng Youlan considered there to be a difference between philosophical and religious Daoism, with contradictory teachings. Creel took them as arising simultaneously, representing the Xian concept in Daoism as a cult of immortality and that of the more philosophical Zhuangzi.

Hence, Creel considered wu wei, as found in the Daodejing and Zhuangzi, to denote two different things.

  1. An "attitude of genuine non-action, motivated by a lack of desire to participate in human affairs" and
  2. A "technique by means of which the one who practices it may gain enhanced control of human affairs".

The first is quite in line with the contemplative Daoism of the Zhuangzi. Creel believed that "contemplative Daoism" came first, and "purposive Daoism" second.

Described as a source of serenity in Daoist thought, only rarely do Daoist texts suggest that ordinary people could gain political power through wu wei. The Zhuangzi does not seem to indicate a definitive philosophical idea, simply that the sage "does not occupy himself with the affairs of the world".

Creel believed the second interpretation to have been imported from the earlier political thought of Legalist Shen Buhai (400 BCE – c. 337 BCE) as Daoists became more interested in the exercise of power by the ruler.[8] Called "rule by non-activity" and strongly advocated by Han Fei, during the Han dynasty until the reign of Han Wudi, rulers confined their activity "chiefly to the appointment and dismissal of his high officials", a plainly Legalist practice inherited from the Qin dynasty.[9][10] This "conception of the ruler's role as a supreme arbiter, who keeps the essential power firmly in his grasp" while leaving details to ministers, has a "deep influence on the theory and practice of Chinese monarchy",[9] and played a "crucial role in the promotion of the autocratic tradition of the Chinese polity", ensuring the ruler's power and the stability of the polity.[11]

The Zhuangzi derives more more from the later part of the Warring States period, ridiculing Confucian moralization.[12] Only appearing three times in the second (more contemplative) half of the Zhuangzi, early Daoists may have avoided the term for its association with Legalism before ultimately co-opting its governmental sense as well. Creel regarded this as having been attempted in the Zhuangzi's 天道; Tiāndào; 'Way of Heaven' chapter. In the more "purposive" Daoism of the Daodejing, much of which was which was believed by Creel if not modern scholarship to have been written after the Zhuangzi, wu wei becomes a major "guiding principle for social and political pursuit" , in which the Daoist "seeks to use his power to control and govern the world".[13][8]

Confucian development edit

Given scant data, sinologist Roger T. Ames regards attempts to determine the origin of wu wei as amounting to strained speculation, although Ames speculates that Shen Buhai's interpretation originated in the Han state he had governance over.[14][15] Few modern scholars necessarily find Creel's chronology entirely convincing. While early scholarship may have assumed an earlier dating of the Daodejing, few critical scholars believe, for instance, that Laozi was a contemporary of Confucius.

Apart from Shen Buhai, the Analects (Lun-yu) is the only preserved text to make use of the term prior to the Zhuangzi. Hence, Creel believed that an important clue to the development of wu wei existed in the Analects, in a saying attributed to Confucius, which reads: "The Master said, 'Was it not Shun who did nothing and yet ruled well? What did he do? He merely corrected his person ("made himself reverent" – Edward Slingerland) and took his proper position (facing south) as ruler'". The concept of a divine king whose "magic power" (virtue) "regulates everything in the land" (Creel) pervades early Chinese philosophy, particularly "in the early branches of Quietism that developed in the fourth century B.C."[16]

Edward Slingerland argues wu wei in this sense has to be attained. But in the Confucian conception of virtue, virtue can only be attained by not consciously trying to attain it.[6] The manifestation of virtue is regarded as a reward by Heaven for following its will – as a power that enables them to establish this will on earth. In this, probably more original sense, wu wei may be regarded as the "skill" of "becoming a fully realized human being", a sense which it shares with Daoism. This "skill" avoids relativity through being linked to a "normative" metaphysical order, making its spontaneity "objective". By achieving a state of wu wei (and taking his proper ritual place), Shun "unifies and orders" the entire world, and finds his place in the "cosmos". Taken as a historical fact demonstrating the viable superiority of Confucianism (or Daoism, for Daoist depictions), wu wei may be understood as a strongly "realist" spiritual-religious ideal, differing from Kantian or Cartesian realism in its Chinese emphasis on practice.[17]

The "object" of wu wei "skill-knowledge" is the Way, which is – to an extent regardless of school – "embodying" the mind to a "normative order existing independently of the minds of the practitioners". The primary example of Confucianism – Confucius at age 7 – displays "mastery of morality" spontaneously, his inclinations being in harmony with his virtue. Confucius considers training unnecessary if one is born loving the Way, as with the disciple Yan Hui. Mencius believed that men are already good, and need only realize it not by trying, but by allowing virtue to realize itself, and coming to love the Way. Training is done to learn to spontaneously love the Way. Virtue is compared with the grain seed (being domesticated) and the flow of water.[18] On the other hand, Xun Kuang considered it possible to attain wu wei only through a long and intensive traditional training.[19]

Daoist development edit

Following its developments elsewhere, Zhuang Zhou and Laozi turn towards an unadorned "no effort". Laozi, as opposed to carved Confucian jade, advocates a return to the primordial Mother and to become like uncarved wood. He condemns doing and grasping, urging the reader to cognitively grasp oneness (still the mind), reduce desires and the size of the state, leaving human nature untouched. In practice, wu wei is aimed at through behaviour modification; cryptically referenced meditation and more purely physical breathing techniques as in the Guanzi, which includes just taking the right posture.[20] The Guanzi itself may have been compiled even after the Han Feizi.

When your body is not aligned,
The inner power will not come.
When you are not tranquil within,
Your mind will not be well ordered.
Align your body, assist the inner power,
Then it will gradually come on its own.

[21]

Though, by still needing to make a cognitive effort, perhaps not resolving the paradox of not doing, the concentration on accomplishing wu wei through the physiological would influence later thinkers.[22] The Daodejing became influential in intellectual circles around 250 BCE (1999: 26–27). Included in the 2nd century Guanzi, the likely older Neiye (or Inward Training) may be the oldest recovered Chinese text, describing what would become Daoist breath meditation techniques and qi circulation, with Harold D. Roth considering it to be a genuine 4th-century BCE text.[23]

When you enlarge your mind and let go of it,
When you relax your qi; vital breath and expand it,
When your body is calm and unmoving:
And you can maintain the One and discard the myriad disturbances.
You will see profit and not be enticed by it,
You will see harm and not be frightened by it.
Relaxed and unwound, yet acutely sensitive,
In solitude you delight in your own person.
This is called "revolving the vital breath":
Your thoughts and deeds seem heavenly.

[24]

Verse 13 describes the aspects of shén; 'numen'', 'numinous', attained through relaxed efforts.

There is a numen [shén]; naturally residing within;
One moment it goes, the next it comes,
And no one is able to conceive of it.
If you lose it you are inevitably disordered;
If you attain it you are inevitably well ordered.
Diligently clean out its lodging place;
And its vital essence will naturally arrive.
Still your attempts to imagine and conceive of it.
Relax your efforts to reflect on and control it.
Be reverent and diligent
And its vital essence will naturally stabilize.
Grasp it and don't let go
Then the eyes and ears won't overflow
And the mind will have nothing else to seek.
When a properly aligned mind resides within you,
The myriad things will be seen in their proper perspective.

[25]

Political development edit

 

Unable to find his philosopher-king, Confucius placed his hope in virtuous ministers.[26] Apart from the Confucian ruler's "divine essence" (ling) "ensuring the fecundity of his people" and fertility of the soil, Creel notes that he was also assisted by "five servants", who "performed the active functions of government".[16] Xun Kuang's Xunzi, a Confucian adaptation to Qin Legalism, defines the ruler in much the same sense, saying that the ruler "need only correct his person" because the "abilities of the ruler appear in his appointment of men to office": namely, appraising virtue and causing others to perform.

Important information lay in the recovery of the fragments of administrator Shen Buhai. Shen portrays Yao as using Fa (administrative method) in the selection and evaluation of men.[27] Though not a conclusive argument against proto-Daoist influence, Shen's Daoist terms do not show evidence of Daoist usage (Confucianism also uses terms like 'Dao', meaning the 'Way' of government), lacking any metaphysical connotation.[28] The later Legalist book, the Han Feizi has a commentary on the Daodejing, but references Shen Buhai rather than Laozi for this usage.[29]

Shen is credited with the dictum "The Sage ruler relies on method and does not rely on wisdom; he relies on technique, not on persuasions",[30] and used the term wu wei to mean that the ruler, though vigilant, should not interfere with the duties of his ministers, saying "One who has the right way of government does not perform the functions of the five (aka various) officials, and yet is the master of the government".[31][32]

Since the bulk of both the Daodejing and Zhuangzi appear to have been composed at a later point, Creel argued that it may therefore be assumed that Shen influenced them,[31][32] much of both appearing to be counter-arguments against Legalist controls.[29] The "Way of Heaven" chapter of the Zhuangzi seems to follow Shen Buhai down to the detail, saying "Superiors must be without action in-order to control the world; inferiors must be active in-order to be employed in the world's business..." and to paraphrase, that foundation and principle are the responsibility of the superior, superstructure and details that of the minister, but then goes on to attack Shen's administrative details as non-essential.[33]

Elsewhere, the Zhuangzi references another Legalist, Shen Dao, as impartial and lacking selfishness, his "great way embracing all things".[34]

Non-action by the ruler edit

 
Zhaoming Mirror frame, Western Han dynasty

Shen Buhai argued that if the government were organized and supervised relying on proper method (Fa), the ruler need do little – and must do little.[35][36] Apparently paraphrasing the Analects, Shen did not consider the relationship between ruler and minister antagonistic necessarily,[37] but still believed that the ruler's most able ministers were his greatest danger,[38] and was convinced that it was impossible to make them loyal without techniques.[39] Sinologist Herrlee G. Creel explains: "The ruler's subjects are so numerous, and so on alert to discover his weaknesses and get the better of him, that it is hopeless for him alone as one man to try to learn their characteristics and control them by his knowledge... the ruler must refrain from taking the initiative, and from making himself conspicuous – and therefore vulnerable – by taking any overt action."[40]

Emphasizing the use of administrative methods (Fa) in secrecy, Shen Buhai portrays the ruler as putting up a front to hide his weaknesses and dependence on his advisers.[41] Shen therefore advises the ruler to keep his own counsel, hide his motivations, and conceal his tracks in inaction, availing himself of an appearance of stupidity and insufficiency.[40][38] Shen says:

If the ruler's intelligence is displayed, men will prepare against it; if his lack of intelligence is displayed, they will delude him. If his wisdom is displayed, men will gloss over (their faults); if his lack of wisdom is displayed, they will hide from him. If his lack of desires is displayed, men will spy out his true desires; if his desires are displayed, they will tempt him. Therefore (the intelligent ruler) says 'I cannot know them; it is only by means of non-action that I control them.'[42][43]

Acting through Fa, the ruler conceals his intentions, likes and dislikes, skills and opinions. Not acting himself, he can avoid being manipulated.[32] The ruler plays no active role in governmental functions. He should not use his talent even if he has it. Not using his own skills, he is better able to secure the services of capable functionaries. Creel argues that not getting involved in details allowed Shen's ruler to "truly rule", because it leaves him free to supervise the government without interfering, maintaining his perspective.[44] Seeing and hearing independently, the ruler is able to make decisions independently, and is, Shen says, able to rule the world thereby.[45]

The ruler is like a mirror, reflecting light, doing nothing, and yet, beauty and ugliness present themselves; (or like) a scale establishing equilibrium, doing nothing, and yet causing lightness and heaviness to discover themselves. (Administrative) method (Fa) is complete acquiescence. (Merging his) personal (concerns) with the public (weal), he does not act. He does not act, and yet the world itself is complete.

— Shen Buhai[27]

This wu wei might be said to end up the political theory of the "Legalists" , if not becoming their general term for political strategy, playing a "crucial role in the promotion of the autocratic tradition of the Chinese polity". The (qualified) non-action of the ruler ensures his power and the stability of the polity.[11]

Non-action in statecraft edit

 
"The Way of Listening is to be giddy as though soused. Be dumber and dumber. Let others deploy themselves, and accordingly I shall know them."
Right and wrong whirl around him like spokes on a wheel, but the sovereign does not complot. Emptiness, stillness, non-action—these are the characteristics of the Way. By checking and comparing how it accords with reality, [one ascertains] the "performance" of an enterprise.[46][47]
Han Fei
Detail of The Spinning Wheel, by Chinese artist Wang Juzheng, Northern Song Dynasty (960–1279)[48]

Shen Buhai insisted that the ruler must be fully informed of the state of his realm, but couldn't afford to get caught up in details and in an ideal situation need listen to no one. Listening to his courtiers might interfere with promotions, and he does not, as Sinologist Herrlee G. Creel says, have the time to do so. The way to see and hear independently is the grouping together of particulars into categories using mechanical or operational method (Fa). On the contrary the ruler's eyes and ears will make him "deaf and blind" (unable to obtain accurate information).[49][50][51][52] Seeing and hearing independently, the ruler is able to make decisions independently, and is, Shen says, able to rule the world thereby.[45]

Despite this, Shen's method of appointment, Ming-shih, advises a particular method for listening to petitioners in the final analyses, which would be articulated as Xing-Ming by Han Fei. In the Han Dynasty secretaries of government who had charge of the records of decisions in criminal matters were called Xing-Ming, which Sima Qian (145 or 135 – 86 BC) and Liu Xiang (77–6 BC) attributed to the doctrine of Shen Buhai (400 – c. 337 BC). Liu Xiang goes as far as to define Shen Buhai's doctrine as Xing-Ming.[53] Rather than having to look for "good" men, ming-shih or xing-ming can seek the right man for a particular post by comparing his reputation with real conduct (xing "form" or shih "reality"), though doing so implies a total organizational knowledge of the regime.[54]

More simply though, one can allow ministers to "name" themselves through accounts of specific cost and time frame, leaving their definition to competing ministers. Claims or utterances "bind the speaker to the realization a job (Makeham)". This was the doctrine, with subtle differences, favoured by Han Fei. Favoring exactness, it combats the tendency to promise too much.[55] The correct articulation of ; míng; 'name'', 'speech'', 'title' is considered crucial to the realization of projects.[56][57]

Shen resolved hair-splitting litigation through wu wei, or not getting involved, making an official's words his own responsibility.[56] Shen Buhai says, "The ruler controls the policy, the ministers manage affairs. To speak ten times and ten times be right, to act a hundred times and a hundred times succeed – this is the business of one who serves another as minister; it is not the way to rule."[58] The correlation between wu wei and ming-shih likely informed the Taoist conception of the formless Tao that "gives rise to the ten thousand things."[59]

Yin (passive mindfulness) edit

Adherence to the use of technique in governing requires the ruler not engage in any interference or subjective consideration.[60] Sinologist John Makeham explains: "assessing words and deeds requires the ruler's dispassionate attention; (yin is) the skill or technique of making one's mind a tabula rasa, non-committaly taking note of all the details of a man's claims and then objectively comparing his achievements of the original claims."[60]

A commentary to the Shiji cites a now-lost book as quoting Shen Buhai saying: "By employing (yin), 'passive mindfulness', in overseeing and keeping account of his vassals, accountability is deeply engraved." The Guanzi similarly says: "Yin is the way of non-action. Yin is neither to add to nor to detract from anything. To give something a name strictly on the basis of its form – this is the Method of yin."[60][61] Yin also aimed at concealing the ruler's intentions, likes and opinions.[60]

Shen Dao edit

Shen Dao espouses an impersonal administration in much the same sense as Shen Buhai, and argued for wu wei, or the non action of the ruler, along the same lines, saying

The Dao of ruler and ministers is that the ministers labour themselves with tasks while the prince has no task; the prince is relaxed and happy while the ministers bear responsibility for tasks. The ministers use all their intelligence and strength to perform his job satisfactorily, in which the ruler takes no part, but merely waits for the job to be finished. As a result, every task is taken care of. The correct way of government is thus.[62][63]

Shen Dao eschews appointment by interview in favour of a mechanical distribution apportioning every person according to their achievement.[64][65] Linking administrative methods or standards to the notion of impartial objectivity associated with universal interest, and reframing the language of the old ritual order to fit a universal, imperial and highly bureaucratized state,[66] Shen cautions the ruler against relying on his own personal judgment,[67] contrasting personal opinions with the merit of the objective standard as preventing personal judgements or opinions from being exercised. Personal opinions destroy standards, and Shen Dao's ruler therefore "does not show favoritism toward a single person".[66]

When an enlightened ruler establishes [gong] ("duke" or "public interest"), [private] desires do not oppose the correct timing [of things], favoritism does not violate the law, nobility does not trump the rules, salary does not exceed [that which is due] one's position, a [single] officer does not occupy multiple offices, and a [single] craftsman does not take up multiple lines of work... [Such a ruler] neither overworked his heart-mind with knowledge nor exhausted himself with self-interest (si), but, rather, depended on laws and methods for settling matters of order and disorder, rewards and punishments for deciding on matters of right and wrong, and weights and balances for resolving issues of heavy or light...[66]

The reason why those who apportion horses use ce-lots, and those who apportion fields use gou-lots, is not that they take ce and gou-lots to be superior to human wisdom, but that one may eliminate private interest and stop resentment by these means. Thus it is said: 'When the great lord relies on fa and does not act personally, affairs are judged in accordance with (objective) method (fa).' The benefit of fa is that each person meets his reward or punishment according to his due, and there are no further expectations of the lord. Thus resentment does not arise and superiors and inferiors are in harmony.

If the lord of men abandons method (Fa) and governs with his own person, then penalties and rewards, seizures and grants, will all emerge from the lord's mind. If this is the case, then those who receive rewards, even if these are commensurate, will ceaselessly expect more; those who receive punishment, even if these are commensurate, will endlessly expect more lenient treatment... people will be rewarded differently for the same merit and punished differently for the same fault. Resentment arises from this."[68]

Han Fei edit

Devoting the entirety of Chapter 14, "How to Love the Ministers", to "persuading the ruler to be ruthless to his ministers", Han Fei's enlightened ruler strikes terror into his ministers by doing nothing (wu wei). The qualities of a ruler, his "mental power, moral excellence and physical prowess" are irrelevant. He discards his private reason and morality, and shows no personal feelings. What is important is his method of government. Fa (administrative standards) require no perfection on the part of the ruler.[69]

If the Han Fei's use of wu wei was derivative of a proto-Daoism, its Dao nonetheless emphasizes autocracy ("Tao does not identify with anything but itself, the ruler does not identify with the ministers"). Accepting that Han Fei applies wu wei specifically to statecraft, professors Xing Lu argues that Han Fei still considered wu wei is still a virtue. As Han Fei says, "by virtue (De) of resting empty and reposed, he waits for the course of nature to enforce itself."[70][71]

Dao is the beginning of the myriad things, the standard of right and wrong. That being so, the intelligent ruler, by holding to the beginning, knows the source of everything, and, by keeping to the standard, knows the origin of good and evil. Therefore, by virtue of resting empty and reposed, he waits for the course of nature to enforce itself so that all names will be defined of themselves and all affairs will be settled of themselves. Empty, he knows the essence of fullness: reposed, he becomes the corrector of motion. Who utters a word creates himself a name; who has an affair creates himself a form. Compare forms and names and see if they are identical. Then the ruler will find nothing to worry about as everything is reduced to its reality...

Dao exists in invisibility; its function, in unintelligibility. Be empty and reposed and have nothing to do-Then from the dark see defects in the light. See but never be seen. Hear but never be heard. Know but never be known. If you hear any word uttered, do not change it nor move it but compare it with the deed and see if word and deed coincide with each other. Place every official with a censor. Do not let them speak to each other. Then everything will be exerted to the utmost. Cover tracks and conceal sources. Then the ministers cannot trace origins. Leave your wisdom and cease your ability. Then your subordinates cannot guess at your limitations.[72][73][74][75][76][77]

The Han Feizi's commentary on the Daodejing asserts that perspectiveless knowledge – an absolute point of view – is possible.[78]

Han dynasty edit

Legalism dominated the intellectual life of the Qin and early Han together with Daoism. Early Han dynasty Emperors like Emperor Jing (r. 157–141 BCE) would be steeped in a Daoistic laissez-faire.[79] But Shen Buhai's book would be widely studied even from the beginning of the Han era.[38] Jia Yi's (200–168 AD) Hsin-shu, undoubtedly influenced by the "Legalists", describes Shen Buhai's techniques as methods of applying the Dao, or virtue, bringing together Confucian and Daoist discourses under the imagery of the Zhuangzi.[75]: pp49, 65  Many later texts, for instance in Huang-Lao, use similar images to describe the quiescent attitude of the ruler.[75]: p55 

The Huang-Lao text Huainanzi (Western Han Dynasty 206 B.C. – 9 A.D.), although oriented toward state interest, would go on to include naturalist arguments in favour of rule by worthies on the basis that one needs their competence for such things as diplomacy, and defines wu wei as follows:

"What is meant ... by wu-wei is that no personal prejudice [private or public will,] interferes with the universal Tao [the laws of things], and that no desires and obsessions lead the true course ... astray. Reason must guide action in order that power may be exercised according to the intrinsic properties and natural trends of things."[80]

The Huang–Lao text Jing fa says:

The right way to understand all these (things) is to remain in a state of [vacuity,] formlessness and non-being. Only if one remains in such a state, may he thereby know that (all things) necessarily possess their forms and names as soon as they come into existence, even though they are as small as autumn down. As soon as forms and names are established, the distinction between black and white becomes manifest... there will be no way to escape from them without a trace or to hide them from regulation... [all things] will correct themselves.[81]

Modern edit

Philosopher Alan Watts believed that wu wei can best be described as "not-forcing."[82] Watts also understood wu wei as “the art of getting out of one’s own way” and offered the following illustration: “The river is not pushed from behind, nor is it pulled from ahead. It falls with gravity.”[83]

Leo Tolstoy was deeply influenced by Daoist philosophy, and wrote his own interpretation of wu wei in his piece Non-Activity.

Psychoanalyst Robin S. Brown has examined wu wei in the context of Western psychotherapy.[84] Brown links wu wei with the psychoanalytic notion of enactment.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Daodejing's chapter 37 quote: " 道常無為而無不為。" translation: "The Dao abides in non-action but there is nothing it does not do."

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Slingerland (2007), p. 7
  2. ^ Tierney, John (2014-12-15). "A Meditation on the Art of Not Trying". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-12-07.
  3. ^ Stringerland 2007 p39,40
  4. ^ Stringerland 2007 p43
    • Creel 1970 p59,78
  5. ^ Ivanhoe, Philip J.; Van Norden, Bryan W. (2005). Readings in Classical Chinese Philosophy (2nd ed.). Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing Company. p. 2. ISBN 0-87220-781-1. OCLC 60826646.
  6. ^ a b Slingerland (2007), p. 6
  7. ^ Slingerland (2007), pp. 7
  8. ^ a b Creel (1982), pp. 5, 11, 73–78
    • Feng Youlan a Short History of Chinese Philosophy p.3
  9. ^ a b Creel (1982), pp. 99
  10. ^ Pan Ku. trans. Homer Dubs, The History of the Former Han Dynasty
  11. ^ a b Go (2002), p. 198
  12. ^ Yuri Pines (2022) Han Feizi and the Earliest Exegesis of Zuozhuan, Monumenta Serica, 70:2, 341-365, doi:10.1080/02549948.2022.2131797
  13. ^ Go (2002), p. 84
  14. ^ (Ames 1994:216)[full citation needed]
  15. ^ Roger T. Ames 1983/1994. p. 50. The Art of Rulership.
  16. ^ a b Creel (1982), p. 59,78; Slingerland (2007), p. 9
  17. ^ Slingerland (2007), pp. 8–9
  18. ^ Slingerland (2007), pp. 10–13, 15–16
  19. ^ Slingerland (2007), pp. 10–13
  20. ^ Slingerland (2007), p. 14
  21. ^ Verse 11, tr. Roth, Harold D. (1999). Original Tao: Inward Training (Nei-yeh) and the Foundations of Taoist Mysticism. Columbia University Press. p. 66.
  22. ^ Slingerland (2007), pp. 14
  23. ^ Roth 1999, p. 23-25.
  24. ^ 24, tr. Roth 1999, p. 92
  25. ^ tr. Roth 1999: 70
  26. ^ Creel (1982), p. 59
  27. ^ a b Creel (1982), p. 64
  28. ^ Creel (1982), p. 62-63
  29. ^ a b Creel (1982), p. 69
  30. ^ Paul R. Goldin p.93. Studies in Early Chinese Philosophy. Insidious Syncretism in the Political Philosophy of Huainanzi.JSTOR j.ctt1wn0qtj.10
  31. ^ a b Creel (1982), pp. 48, 62–63
  32. ^ a b c S. Y. Hsieh, 1995. p.92 Chinese Thought: An Introduction
  33. ^ Creel (1982), p. 71
  34. ^ Antonio S. Cua 2003 p.362, Encyclopedia of Chinese Philosophy
  35. ^ Creel (1982), pp. 69, 99
  36. ^ Creel (1974), p. 66
  37. ^ R. P. Peerenboom 1993 p.241. Law and Morality in Ancient China.
  38. ^ a b c Creel (1974), p. 35
  39. ^ Go (2002), p. 143
  40. ^ a b Creel (1982), p. 67
  41. ^ Karyn Lai 2017. p.171. An Introduction to Chinese Philosophy.
  42. ^ Creel (1982), p. 66
  43. ^ Huang Kejian 2016 p.185. From Destiny to Dao: A Survey of Pre-Qin Philosophy in China.
  44. ^ Creel (1982), p. 65-66;Go (2002), p. 198
  45. ^ a b Creel (1974), p. 26
  46. ^ Goldin (2013), p. 10
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General sources edit

  • Creel, Herrlee Glessner (1982) [1970]. What is Taoism?: and other studies in Chinese cultural history. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226120478.
  • Creel, Herrlee Glessner (1974). Shen Pu-hai: A Chinese Political Philosopher of the Fourth Century B.C. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226120270.
  • Creel, Herrlee Glessner (1959). "The Meaning of Hsing-Ming". Studia Serica: Sinological studies dedicated to Bernhard Kalgren.
  • Go, Xuezhi (2002). The ideal Chinese political leader: a historical and cultural perspective. Westport, CN: Praeger. ISBN 9780275972592.
  • Goldin, Paul R. (2013). "Introduction: Han Fei and the Han Feizi" (PDF). In Goldin, Paul R. (ed.). Dao Companion to the Philosophy of Han Fei. Dao Companions to Chinese Philosophy. pp. 1–21. doi:10.1007/978-94-007-4318-2_1. ISBN 978-94-007-4317-5.
    • Yang, Soon-Ja (2013). "Shen Dao's Theory of fa and His Influence on Han Fei". In Goldin, Paul R. (ed.). Dao Companion to the Philosophy of Han Fei. doi:10.1007/978-94-007-4318-2_1.
  • Makeham, J. (1990). "The Legalist Concept of Hsing-Ming: An Example of the Contribution of Archaeological Evidence to the Re-Interpretation of Transmitted Texts". Monumenta Serica. 39: 87–114. doi:10.1080/02549948.1990.11731214. JSTOR 40726902.
  • Slingerland, Edward (2007). Effortless Action: Wu-wei As Conceptual Metaphor and Spiritual Ideal in Early China. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195138993.

External links edit

  • "Taoism – The Wu-Wei Principle" by Ted Kardash. Jade Dragon Online, June 1998.
  • "Wei-wu-wei: Nondual action" by David Loy. Philosophy East and West, Vol. 35, No. 1 (January 1985) pp. 73–87.
  • "Wu-Wei in Europe. A Study of Eurasian Economic Thought" by Christian Gerlach. London School of Economics 2005.
  • "Wú wéi translations and usages in Buddhism"—Digital Dictionary of Buddhism
  • wu wei (WuWei) Calligraphy Scrolls from the Dao de Jing
  • —The Entire Philosophy of Laozi's Daodejing Explained in Common Sense
  • Laozi, Libertarianism & Wu-wei(Non-interference) Analysis老子的无为详解

lang, other, uses, wuwei, disambiguation, disambiguation, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, technical, most, readers, understand, please, h. For other uses see Wuwei disambiguation and Wu Wei disambiguation This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Wu wei simplified Chinese 无为 traditional Chinese 無為 pinyin wuwei is an ancient Chinese concept literally meaning inexertion inaction or effortless action a 1 2 Wu wei emerged in the Spring and Autumn period With early literary examples as an idea in the Classic of Poetry 3 it becomes an important concept in the Confucian Analects 4 Chinese statecraft 5 and Daoism It was most commonly used to refer to an ideal form of government 6 including the behavior of the emperor describing a state of personal harmony free flowing spontaneity and laissez faire It generally denotes a state of spirit or state of mind and in Confucianism accords with conventional morality Wu weiChinese nameTraditional Chinese無為Simplified Chinese无为TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinwuweiWade Gileswu2 wei2IPA u we ɪ Yue CantoneseYale RomanizationmouhwaihJyutpingmou4 wai4IPA mou wɐi Vietnamese nameVietnamesevo viKorean nameHangul무위Hanja無爲TranscriptionsRevised RomanizationmuwiJapanese nameKanji無為HiraganaむいTranscriptionsRevised HepburnmuiSinologist Jean Francois Billeter describes wu wei as a state of perfect knowledge of the reality of the situation perfect efficaciousness and the realization of a perfect economy of energy which Edward Slingerland qualifies in practice as a set of transformed dispositions including physical bearing conforming with the normative order 7 Wu Wei is the main principle of Dao philosophy which speaks of the importance of achieving the Dao or the Natural Way in all actions and development of things Without forcing or rushing against the natural order of things to avoid false development and mistakes The philosophy of Dao Dao Jia and the religion of Dao Dao Jiao are two different things For example in the philosophy of Dao Dao Jia there is no mysticism and belief in ghosts and evil spirits The founder of Dao philosophy Lao Zi successfully founded his philosophical school with the manuscript Dao De Jing Treatise on Morals In addition to achieve the state of Dao the followers were required to perform certain physical exercises Later during the Warring States era professional warriors used Wu Wei as the primary guide for their training and fighting methods and created Wu Wei Martial Arts At that harsh time among the best ancient martial arts schools the Wu Wei school had an undeniable reputation The core fighting skill of Wu Wei Martial Arts is the skill of the rolling power Hun Yuan Gong According to ancient tradition the name of that combat system was most often known as Wuweimen Gates to Wu Wei Contents 1 Early definitions 2 Confucian development 3 Daoist development 4 Political development 4 1 Non action by the ruler 4 2 Non action in statecraft 4 2 1 Yin passive mindfulness 4 3 Shen Dao 4 4 Han Fei 4 5 Han dynasty 5 Modern 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 General sources 9 External linksEarly definitions editAs quoted by the sinologist Herrlee Creel the early scholarship of Feng Youlan considered there to be a difference between philosophical and religious Daoism with contradictory teachings Creel took them as arising simultaneously representing the Xian concept in Daoism as a cult of immortality and that of the more philosophical Zhuangzi Hence Creel considered wu wei as found in the Daodejing and Zhuangzi to denote two different things An attitude of genuine non action motivated by a lack of desire to participate in human affairs and A technique by means of which the one who practices it may gain enhanced control of human affairs The first is quite in line with the contemplative Daoism of the Zhuangzi Creel believed that contemplative Daoism came first and purposive Daoism second Described as a source of serenity in Daoist thought only rarely do Daoist texts suggest that ordinary people could gain political power through wu wei The Zhuangzi does not seem to indicate a definitive philosophical idea simply that the sage does not occupy himself with the affairs of the world Creel believed the second interpretation to have been imported from the earlier political thought of Legalist Shen Buhai 400 BCE c 337 BCE as Daoists became more interested in the exercise of power by the ruler 8 Called rule by non activity and strongly advocated by Han Fei during the Han dynasty until the reign of Han Wudi rulers confined their activity chiefly to the appointment and dismissal of his high officials a plainly Legalist practice inherited from the Qin dynasty 9 10 This conception of the ruler s role as a supreme arbiter who keeps the essential power firmly in his grasp while leaving details to ministers has a deep influence on the theory and practice of Chinese monarchy 9 and played a crucial role in the promotion of the autocratic tradition of the Chinese polity ensuring the ruler s power and the stability of the polity 11 The Zhuangzi derives more more from the later part of the Warring States period ridiculing Confucian moralization 12 Only appearing three times in the second more contemplative half of the Zhuangzi early Daoists may have avoided the term for its association with Legalism before ultimately co opting its governmental sense as well Creel regarded this as having been attempted in the Zhuangzi s 天道 Tiandao Way of Heaven chapter In the more purposive Daoism of the Daodejing much of which was which was believed by Creel if not modern scholarship to have been written after the Zhuangzi wu wei becomes a major guiding principle for social and political pursuit in which the Daoist seeks to use his power to control and govern the world 13 8 Confucian development editGiven scant data sinologist Roger T Ames regards attempts to determine the origin of wu wei as amounting to strained speculation although Ames speculates that Shen Buhai s interpretation originated in the Han state he had governance over 14 15 Few modern scholars necessarily find Creel s chronology entirely convincing While early scholarship may have assumed an earlier dating of the Daodejing few critical scholars believe for instance that Laozi was a contemporary of Confucius Apart from Shen Buhai the Analects Lun yu is the only preserved text to make use of the term prior to the Zhuangzi Hence Creel believed that an important clue to the development of wu wei existed in the Analects in a saying attributed to Confucius which reads The Master said Was it not Shun who did nothing and yet ruled well What did he do He merely corrected his person made himself reverent Edward Slingerland and took his proper position facing south as ruler The concept of a divine king whose magic power virtue regulates everything in the land Creel pervades early Chinese philosophy particularly in the early branches of Quietism that developed in the fourth century B C 16 Edward Slingerland argues wu wei in this sense has to be attained But in the Confucian conception of virtue virtue can only be attained by not consciously trying to attain it 6 The manifestation of virtue is regarded as a reward by Heaven for following its will as a power that enables them to establish this will on earth In this probably more original sense wu wei may be regarded as the skill of becoming a fully realized human being a sense which it shares with Daoism This skill avoids relativity through being linked to a normative metaphysical order making its spontaneity objective By achieving a state of wu wei and taking his proper ritual place Shun unifies and orders the entire world and finds his place in the cosmos Taken as a historical fact demonstrating the viable superiority of Confucianism or Daoism for Daoist depictions wu wei may be understood as a strongly realist spiritual religious ideal differing from Kantian or Cartesian realism in its Chinese emphasis on practice 17 The object of wu wei skill knowledge is the Way which is to an extent regardless of school embodying the mind to a normative order existing independently of the minds of the practitioners The primary example of Confucianism Confucius at age 7 displays mastery of morality spontaneously his inclinations being in harmony with his virtue Confucius considers training unnecessary if one is born loving the Way as with the disciple Yan Hui Mencius believed that men are already good and need only realize it not by trying but by allowing virtue to realize itself and coming to love the Way Training is done to learn to spontaneously love the Way Virtue is compared with the grain seed being domesticated and the flow of water 18 On the other hand Xun Kuang considered it possible to attain wu wei only through a long and intensive traditional training 19 Daoist development editFollowing its developments elsewhere Zhuang Zhou and Laozi turn towards an unadorned no effort Laozi as opposed to carved Confucian jade advocates a return to the primordial Mother and to become like uncarved wood He condemns doing and grasping urging the reader to cognitively grasp oneness still the mind reduce desires and the size of the state leaving human nature untouched In practice wu wei is aimed at through behaviour modification cryptically referenced meditation and more purely physical breathing techniques as in the Guanzi which includes just taking the right posture 20 The Guanzi itself may have been compiled even after the Han Feizi When your body is not aligned The inner power will not come When you are not tranquil within Your mind will not be well ordered Align your body assist the inner power Then it will gradually come on its own 21 Though by still needing to make a cognitive effort perhaps not resolving the paradox of not doing the concentration on accomplishing wu wei through the physiological would influence later thinkers 22 The Daodejing became influential in intellectual circles around 250 BCE 1999 26 27 Included in the 2nd century Guanzi the likely older Neiye or Inward Training may be the oldest recovered Chinese text describing what would become Daoist breath meditation techniques and qi circulation with Harold D Roth considering it to be a genuine 4th century BCE text 23 When you enlarge your mind and let go of it When you relax your qi vital breath and expand it When your body is calm and unmoving And you can maintain the One and discard the myriad disturbances You will see profit and not be enticed by it You will see harm and not be frightened by it Relaxed and unwound yet acutely sensitive In solitude you delight in your own person This is called revolving the vital breath Your thoughts and deeds seem heavenly 24 Verse 13 describes the aspects of shen numen numinous attained through relaxed efforts There is a numen shen naturally residing within One moment it goes the next it comes And no one is able to conceive of it If you lose it you are inevitably disordered If you attain it you are inevitably well ordered Diligently clean out its lodging place And its vital essence will naturally arrive Still your attempts to imagine and conceive of it Relax your efforts to reflect on and control it Be reverent and diligent And its vital essence will naturally stabilize Grasp it and don t let go Then the eyes and ears won t overflow And the mind will have nothing else to seek When a properly aligned mind resides within you The myriad things will be seen in their proper perspective 25 Political development edit nbsp Further information Chinese Legalism Unable to find his philosopher king Confucius placed his hope in virtuous ministers 26 Apart from the Confucian ruler s divine essence ling ensuring the fecundity of his people and fertility of the soil Creel notes that he was also assisted by five servants who performed the active functions of government 16 Xun Kuang s Xunzi a Confucian adaptation to Qin Legalism defines the ruler in much the same sense saying that the ruler need only correct his person because the abilities of the ruler appear in his appointment of men to office namely appraising virtue and causing others to perform Important information lay in the recovery of the fragments of administrator Shen Buhai Shen portrays Yao as using Fa administrative method in the selection and evaluation of men 27 Though not a conclusive argument against proto Daoist influence Shen s Daoist terms do not show evidence of Daoist usage Confucianism also uses terms like Dao meaning the Way of government lacking any metaphysical connotation 28 The later Legalist book the Han Feizi has a commentary on the Daodejing but references Shen Buhai rather than Laozi for this usage 29 Shen is credited with the dictum The Sage ruler relies on method and does not rely on wisdom he relies on technique not on persuasions 30 and used the term wu wei to mean that the ruler though vigilant should not interfere with the duties of his ministers saying One who has the right way of government does not perform the functions of the five aka various officials and yet is the master of the government 31 32 Since the bulk of both the Daodejing and Zhuangzi appear to have been composed at a later point Creel argued that it may therefore be assumed that Shen influenced them 31 32 much of both appearing to be counter arguments against Legalist controls 29 The Way of Heaven chapter of the Zhuangzi seems to follow Shen Buhai down to the detail saying Superiors must be without action in order to control the world inferiors must be active in order to be employed in the world s business and to paraphrase that foundation and principle are the responsibility of the superior superstructure and details that of the minister but then goes on to attack Shen s administrative details as non essential 33 Elsewhere the Zhuangzi references another Legalist Shen Dao as impartial and lacking selfishness his great way embracing all things 34 Non action by the ruler edit nbsp Zhaoming Mirror frame Western Han dynastyShen Buhai argued that if the government were organized and supervised relying on proper method Fa the ruler need do little and must do little 35 36 Apparently paraphrasing the Analects Shen did not consider the relationship between ruler and minister antagonistic necessarily 37 but still believed that the ruler s most able ministers were his greatest danger 38 and was convinced that it was impossible to make them loyal without techniques 39 Sinologist Herrlee G Creel explains The ruler s subjects are so numerous and so on alert to discover his weaknesses and get the better of him that it is hopeless for him alone as one man to try to learn their characteristics and control them by his knowledge the ruler must refrain from taking the initiative and from making himself conspicuous and therefore vulnerable by taking any overt action 40 Emphasizing the use of administrative methods Fa in secrecy Shen Buhai portrays the ruler as putting up a front to hide his weaknesses and dependence on his advisers 41 Shen therefore advises the ruler to keep his own counsel hide his motivations and conceal his tracks in inaction availing himself of an appearance of stupidity and insufficiency 40 38 Shen says If the ruler s intelligence is displayed men will prepare against it if his lack of intelligence is displayed they will delude him If his wisdom is displayed men will gloss over their faults if his lack of wisdom is displayed they will hide from him If his lack of desires is displayed men will spy out his true desires if his desires are displayed they will tempt him Therefore the intelligent ruler says I cannot know them it is only by means of non action that I control them 42 43 Acting through Fa the ruler conceals his intentions likes and dislikes skills and opinions Not acting himself he can avoid being manipulated 32 The ruler plays no active role in governmental functions He should not use his talent even if he has it Not using his own skills he is better able to secure the services of capable functionaries Creel argues that not getting involved in details allowed Shen s ruler to truly rule because it leaves him free to supervise the government without interfering maintaining his perspective 44 Seeing and hearing independently the ruler is able to make decisions independently and is Shen says able to rule the world thereby 45 The ruler is like a mirror reflecting light doing nothing and yet beauty and ugliness present themselves or like a scale establishing equilibrium doing nothing and yet causing lightness and heaviness to discover themselves Administrative method Fa is complete acquiescence Merging his personal concerns with the public weal he does not act He does not act and yet the world itself is complete Shen Buhai 27 This wu wei might be said to end up the political theory of the Legalists if not becoming their general term for political strategy playing a crucial role in the promotion of the autocratic tradition of the Chinese polity The qualified non action of the ruler ensures his power and the stability of the polity 11 Non action in statecraft edit nbsp The Way of Listening is to be giddy as though soused Be dumber and dumber Let others deploy themselves and accordingly I shall know them Right and wrong whirl around him like spokes on a wheel but the sovereign does not complot Emptiness stillness non action these are the characteristics of the Way By checking and comparing how it accords with reality one ascertains the performance of an enterprise 46 47 Han Fei Detail of The Spinning Wheel by Chinese artist Wang Juzheng Northern Song Dynasty 960 1279 48 Shen Buhai insisted that the ruler must be fully informed of the state of his realm but couldn t afford to get caught up in details and in an ideal situation need listen to no one Listening to his courtiers might interfere with promotions and he does not as Sinologist Herrlee G Creel says have the time to do so The way to see and hear independently is the grouping together of particulars into categories using mechanical or operational method Fa On the contrary the ruler s eyes and ears will make him deaf and blind unable to obtain accurate information 49 50 51 52 Seeing and hearing independently the ruler is able to make decisions independently and is Shen says able to rule the world thereby 45 Despite this Shen s method of appointment Ming shih advises a particular method for listening to petitioners in the final analyses which would be articulated as Xing Ming by Han Fei In the Han Dynasty secretaries of government who had charge of the records of decisions in criminal matters were called Xing Ming which Sima Qian 145 or 135 86 BC and Liu Xiang 77 6 BC attributed to the doctrine of Shen Buhai 400 c 337 BC Liu Xiang goes as far as to define Shen Buhai s doctrine as Xing Ming 53 Rather than having to look for good men ming shih or xing ming can seek the right man for a particular post by comparing his reputation with real conduct xing form or shih reality though doing so implies a total organizational knowledge of the regime 54 More simply though one can allow ministers to name themselves through accounts of specific cost and time frame leaving their definition to competing ministers Claims or utterances bind the speaker to the realization a job Makeham This was the doctrine with subtle differences favoured by Han Fei Favoring exactness it combats the tendency to promise too much 55 The correct articulation of 名 ming name speech title is considered crucial to the realization of projects 56 57 Shen resolved hair splitting litigation through wu wei or not getting involved making an official s words his own responsibility 56 Shen Buhai says The ruler controls the policy the ministers manage affairs To speak ten times and ten times be right to act a hundred times and a hundred times succeed this is the business of one who serves another as minister it is not the way to rule 58 The correlation between wu wei and ming shih likely informed the Taoist conception of the formless Tao that gives rise to the ten thousand things 59 Yin passive mindfulness edit Adherence to the use of technique in governing requires the ruler not engage in any interference or subjective consideration 60 Sinologist John Makeham explains assessing words and deeds requires the ruler s dispassionate attention yin is the skill or technique of making one s mind a tabula rasa non committaly taking note of all the details of a man s claims and then objectively comparing his achievements of the original claims 60 A commentary to the Shiji cites a now lost book as quoting Shen Buhai saying By employing yin passive mindfulness in overseeing and keeping account of his vassals accountability is deeply engraved The Guanzi similarly says Yin is the way of non action Yin is neither to add to nor to detract from anything To give something a name strictly on the basis of its form this is the Method of yin 60 61 Yin also aimed at concealing the ruler s intentions likes and opinions 60 Shen Dao edit Shen Dao espouses an impersonal administration in much the same sense as Shen Buhai and argued for wu wei or the non action of the ruler along the same lines saying The Dao of ruler and ministers is that the ministers labour themselves with tasks while the prince has no task the prince is relaxed and happy while the ministers bear responsibility for tasks The ministers use all their intelligence and strength to perform his job satisfactorily in which the ruler takes no part but merely waits for the job to be finished As a result every task is taken care of The correct way of government is thus 62 63 Shen Dao eschews appointment by interview in favour of a mechanical distribution apportioning every person according to their achievement 64 65 Linking administrative methods or standards to the notion of impartial objectivity associated with universal interest and reframing the language of the old ritual order to fit a universal imperial and highly bureaucratized state 66 Shen cautions the ruler against relying on his own personal judgment 67 contrasting personal opinions with the merit of the objective standard as preventing personal judgements or opinions from being exercised Personal opinions destroy standards and Shen Dao s ruler therefore does not show favoritism toward a single person 66 When an enlightened ruler establishes gong duke or public interest private desires do not oppose the correct timing of things favoritism does not violate the law nobility does not trump the rules salary does not exceed that which is due one s position a single officer does not occupy multiple offices and a single craftsman does not take up multiple lines of work Such a ruler neither overworked his heart mind with knowledge nor exhausted himself with self interest si but rather depended on laws and methods for settling matters of order and disorder rewards and punishments for deciding on matters of right and wrong and weights and balances for resolving issues of heavy or light 66 The reason why those who apportion horses use ce lots and those who apportion fields use gou lots is not that they take ce and gou lots to be superior to human wisdom but that one may eliminate private interest and stop resentment by these means Thus it is said When the great lord relies on fa and does not act personally affairs are judged in accordance with objective method fa The benefit of fa is that each person meets his reward or punishment according to his due and there are no further expectations of the lord Thus resentment does not arise and superiors and inferiors are in harmony If the lord of men abandons method Fa and governs with his own person then penalties and rewards seizures and grants will all emerge from the lord s mind If this is the case then those who receive rewards even if these are commensurate will ceaselessly expect more those who receive punishment even if these are commensurate will endlessly expect more lenient treatment people will be rewarded differently for the same merit and punished differently for the same fault Resentment arises from this 68 Han Fei edit Devoting the entirety of Chapter 14 How to Love the Ministers to persuading the ruler to be ruthless to his ministers Han Fei s enlightened ruler strikes terror into his ministers by doing nothing wu wei The qualities of a ruler his mental power moral excellence and physical prowess are irrelevant He discards his private reason and morality and shows no personal feelings What is important is his method of government Fa administrative standards require no perfection on the part of the ruler 69 If the Han Fei s use of wu wei was derivative of a proto Daoism its Dao nonetheless emphasizes autocracy Tao does not identify with anything but itself the ruler does not identify with the ministers Accepting that Han Fei applies wu wei specifically to statecraft professors Xing Lu argues that Han Fei still considered wu wei is still a virtue As Han Fei says by virtue De of resting empty and reposed he waits for the course of nature to enforce itself 70 71 Dao is the beginning of the myriad things the standard of right and wrong That being so the intelligent ruler by holding to the beginning knows the source of everything and by keeping to the standard knows the origin of good and evil Therefore by virtue of resting empty and reposed he waits for the course of nature to enforce itself so that all names will be defined of themselves and all affairs will be settled of themselves Empty he knows the essence of fullness reposed he becomes the corrector of motion Who utters a word creates himself a name who has an affair creates himself a form Compare forms and names and see if they are identical Then the ruler will find nothing to worry about as everything is reduced to its reality Dao exists in invisibility its function in unintelligibility Be empty and reposed and have nothing to do Then from the dark see defects in the light See but never be seen Hear but never be heard Know but never be known If you hear any word uttered do not change it nor move it but compare it with the deed and see if word and deed coincide with each other Place every official with a censor Do not let them speak to each other Then everything will be exerted to the utmost Cover tracks and conceal sources Then the ministers cannot trace origins Leave your wisdom and cease your ability Then your subordinates cannot guess at your limitations 72 73 74 75 76 77 The Han Feizi s commentary on the Daodejing asserts that perspectiveless knowledge an absolute point of view is possible 78 Han dynasty edit Legalism dominated the intellectual life of the Qin and early Han together with Daoism Early Han dynasty Emperors like Emperor Jing r 157 141 BCE would be steeped in a Daoistic laissez faire 79 But Shen Buhai s book would be widely studied even from the beginning of the Han era 38 Jia Yi s 200 168 AD Hsin shu undoubtedly influenced by the Legalists describes Shen Buhai s techniques as methods of applying the Dao or virtue bringing together Confucian and Daoist discourses under the imagery of the Zhuangzi 75 pp49 65 Many later texts for instance in Huang Lao use similar images to describe the quiescent attitude of the ruler 75 p55 The Huang Lao text Huainanzi Western Han Dynasty 206 B C 9 A D although oriented toward state interest would go on to include naturalist arguments in favour of rule by worthies on the basis that one needs their competence for such things as diplomacy and defines wu wei as follows What is meant by wu wei is that no personal prejudice private or public will interferes with the universal Tao the laws of things and that no desires and obsessions lead the true course astray Reason must guide action in order that power may be exercised according to the intrinsic properties and natural trends of things 80 The Huang Lao text Jing fa says The right way to understand all these things is to remain in a state of vacuity formlessness and non being Only if one remains in such a state may he thereby know that all things necessarily possess their forms and names as soon as they come into existence even though they are as small as autumn down As soon as forms and names are established the distinction between black and white becomes manifest there will be no way to escape from them without a trace or to hide them from regulation all things will correct themselves 81 Modern editPhilosopher Alan Watts believed that wu wei can best be described as not forcing 82 Watts also understood wu wei as the art of getting out of one s own way and offered the following illustration The river is not pushed from behind nor is it pulled from ahead It falls with gravity 83 Leo Tolstoy was deeply influenced by Daoist philosophy and wrote his own interpretation of wu wei in his piece Non Activity Psychoanalyst Robin S Brown has examined wu wei in the context of Western psychotherapy 84 Brown links wu wei with the psychoanalytic notion of enactment See also editFlow psychology Willpower paradox Sprezzatura Sahaja Samyama ZuhdNotes edit Daodejing s chapter 37 quote 道常無為而無不為 translation The Dao abides in non action but there is nothing it does not do References editCitations edit Slingerland 2007 p 7 Tierney John 2014 12 15 A Meditation on the Art of Not Trying The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2019 12 07 Stringerland 2007 p39 40 Stringerland 2007 p43 Creel 1970 p59 78 Ivanhoe Philip J Van Norden Bryan W 2005 Readings in Classical Chinese Philosophy 2nd ed Indianapolis Hackett Publishing Company p 2 ISBN 0 87220 781 1 OCLC 60826646 a b Slingerland 2007 p 6 Slingerland 2007 pp 7 a b Creel 1982 pp 5 11 73 78 Feng Youlan a Short History of Chinese Philosophy p 3 a b Creel 1982 pp 99 Pan Ku trans Homer Dubs The History of the Former Han Dynasty a b Go 2002 p 198 Yuri Pines 2022 Han Feizi and the Earliest Exegesis of Zuozhuan Monumenta Serica 70 2 341 365 doi 10 1080 02549948 2022 2131797 Go 2002 p 84 Ames 1994 216 full citation needed Roger T Ames 1983 1994 p 50 The Art of Rulership a b Creel 1982 p 59 78 Slingerland 2007 p 9 Slingerland 2007 pp 8 9 Slingerland 2007 pp 10 13 15 16 Slingerland 2007 pp 10 13 Slingerland 2007 p 14 Verse 11 tr Roth Harold D 1999 Original Tao Inward Training Nei yeh and the Foundations of Taoist Mysticism Columbia University Press p 66 Slingerland 2007 pp 14 Roth 1999 p 23 25 24 tr Roth 1999 p 92 tr Roth 1999 70 Creel 1982 p 59 a b Creel 1982 p 64 Creel 1982 p 62 63 a b Creel 1982 p 69 Paul R Goldin p 93 Studies in Early Chinese Philosophy Insidious Syncretism in the Political Philosophy of Huainanzi JSTOR j ctt1wn0qtj 10 a b Creel 1982 pp 48 62 63 a b c S Y Hsieh 1995 p 92 Chinese Thought An Introduction Creel 1982 p 71 Antonio S Cua 2003 p 362 Encyclopedia of Chinese Philosophy Creel 1982 pp 69 99 Creel 1974 p 66 R P Peerenboom 1993 p 241 Law and Morality in Ancient China a b c Creel 1974 p 35 Go 2002 p 143 a b Creel 1982 p 67 Karyn Lai 2017 p 171 An Introduction to Chinese Philosophy Creel 1982 p 66 Huang Kejian 2016 p 185 From Destiny to Dao A Survey of Pre Qin Philosophy in China Creel 1982 p 65 66 Go 2002 p 198 a b Creel 1974 p 26 Goldin 2013 p 10 Chen Qiyou 2000 2 8 156 Deng Yingke Wang Pingxing 2005 Ancient Chinese Inventions 五洲传播出版社 World communication publishing p 48 ISBN 7 5085 0837 8 Creel 1982 p 81 Creel 1974 pp 33 68 69 A C Graham 1989 p 283 Disputers of the Tao Shen Bu Hai Creel 1982 p 72 80 103 104 Creel 1959 pp 199 200 Makeham 1990 pp 91 92 Creel 1974 p 57 Creel 1982 p 83 Creel 1959 p 203 Makeham 1990 p 91 Mark Edward Lewis 1999 p 33 Writing and Authority in Early China Goldin 2013 p 9 a b Makeham 1990 p 91 John Makeham 1994 p 67 Name and Actuality in Early Chinese Thought Creel 1982 p 65 Julia Ching R W L Guisso 1991 pp 75 119 Sages and Filial Sons a b c d Makeham 1990 pp 90 91 John Makeham 1994 p 69 Name and Actuality in Early Chinese Thought L K Chen and H C W Sung 2015 p 251 Dao Companion to Daoist Philosophy Emerson Shen Dao Text and Translation John Knoblock 1990 p 172 Xunzi Books 7 16 Masayuki Sato 2003 p 122 126 133 136 The Confucian Quest for Order a b c Erica Brindley The Polarization of the Concepts Si Private Interest and Gong Public Interest in Early Chinese Thought pp 6 8 12 13 16 19 21 22 24 27 Shen Dao s Own Voice 2011 p 202 Springer Science Business Media B V 2011 Paul R Goldin Persistent Misconceptions about Chinese Legalism 1 Masayuki Sato 2003 p 129 The Confucian Quest for Order Yang 2013 p 50 Ellen Marie Chen 1975 pp 2 4 6 9 Reason and Nature in the Han Fei Tzu Journal of Chinese Philosophy Volume 2 Xing Lu 1998 Rhetoric in Ancient China Fifth to Third Century B C E p 264 Roger T Ames 1983 p 50 The Art of Rulership Chapter V The Tao of the Sovereign The Complete Works of Han Fei Tzŭ with Collected Commentaries Retrieved 2019 03 21 Han Fei The Way of the Ruler Watson p 16 Han Fei tzu chapter 5 Han Fei tzu chi chieh 1 p 18 cf Burton Watson Han Fei Tzu Basic Writings New York Columbia University Press 1964 a b c Mark Csikszentmihalyi Chia I s Techniques of the Tao and the Han Confucian Appropriation of Technical Discourse Asia Major Third Series Vol 10 No 1 2 1997 pp 49 67 JSTOR 41645528 Huang Kejian 2016 pp 186 187 From Destiny to Dao A Survey of Pre Qin Philosophy in China Lim Xiao Wei Grace 2005 Law and Morality in the Han Fei Zi p 18 Chad Hansen 1992 p 371 A Daoist Theory of Chinese Thought Hansen Chad Daoism The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2014 Edition Edward N Zalta ed http plato stanford edu archives fall2014 entries daoism John M Hobson The Eastern Origins of Western Civilisation Cambridge 2004 p 190 L K Chen and H C W Sung 2015 p 253 Dao Companion to Daoist Philosophy Alan Watts The Principle Of Not Forcing Archived from the original on 2021 12 22 via www youtube com Watts Alan March 1974 Cloud Hidden Whereabouts Unknown Pantheon Books ISBN 978 0 394 71999 3 Brown R S 2020 Groundwork for a Transpersonal Psychoanalysis Spirituality Relationship and Participation Abingdon UK New York Routledge General sources edit Creel Herrlee Glessner 1982 1970 What is Taoism and other studies in Chinese cultural history Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226120478 Creel Herrlee Glessner 1974 Shen Pu hai A Chinese Political Philosopher of the Fourth Century B C Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226120270 Creel Herrlee Glessner 1959 The Meaning of Hsing Ming Studia Serica Sinological studies dedicated to Bernhard Kalgren Go Xuezhi 2002 The ideal Chinese political leader a historical and cultural perspective Westport CN Praeger ISBN 9780275972592 Goldin Paul R 2013 Introduction Han Fei and the Han Feizi PDF In Goldin Paul R ed Dao Companion to the Philosophy of Han Fei Dao Companions to Chinese Philosophy pp 1 21 doi 10 1007 978 94 007 4318 2 1 ISBN 978 94 007 4317 5 Yang Soon Ja 2013 Shen Dao s Theory of fa and His Influence on Han Fei In Goldin Paul R ed Dao Companion to the Philosophy of Han Fei doi 10 1007 978 94 007 4318 2 1 Makeham J 1990 The Legalist Concept of Hsing Ming An Example of the Contribution of Archaeological Evidence to the Re Interpretation of Transmitted Texts Monumenta Serica 39 87 114 doi 10 1080 02549948 1990 11731214 JSTOR 40726902 Slingerland Edward 2007 Effortless Action Wu wei As Conceptual Metaphor and Spiritual Ideal in Early China Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195138993 External links edit Taoism The Wu Wei Principle by Ted Kardash Jade Dragon Online June 1998 Wei wu wei Nondual action by David Loy Philosophy East and West Vol 35 No 1 January 1985 pp 73 87 Wu Wei in Europe A Study of Eurasian Economic Thought by Christian Gerlach London School of Economics 2005 Wu wei translations and usages in Buddhism Digital Dictionary of Buddhism wu wei WuWei Calligraphy Scrolls from the Dao de Jing Daoism net The Entire Philosophy of Laozi s Daodejing Explained in Common Sense Laozi Libertarianism amp Wu wei Non interference Analysis老子的无为详解 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wu wei amp oldid 1217388887, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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